So, how can molecules correctly work out each complex step without some crude form of awareness? — Gary Enfield
they clearly operate just on their own. — Gary Enfield
So, how can molecules correctly work out each complex step without some crude form of awareness? — Gary Enfield
Sorry - but chemistry says that DNA is no more than a template to produce components. — Gary Enfield
It has no logical capacity/capability. — Gary Enfield
This is a process, run by enzymes, (single but complex molecules), which are observed to seemingly identify a double break in the DNA strand; then find a suitable piece of alternate DNA to compare it to; align the remnants of the strands with the whole 'template'; perfectly in-fill any gap (which can be of varying length on either strand); and then re-connect the broken strands, without mixing them up. — Gary Enfield
I am told that this process only runs on a few enzymes - far fewer than the logical steps we can all appreciate from this process.
There are no known chemical signals to form any known form of feedback loop, and no basic chemistry like a catalyst to explain the varying rationale either.
This is truly remarkable but scientifically proven.
So could this repeatable process, (which resolves problems that can vary on each occasion, yet produce the complex but predictable outcomes), be evidence of a degree of awareness in a single molecule? — Gary Enfield
The complexity of living organisms is staggering, and it is quite sobering to note that we currently lack even the tiniest hint of what the function might be for more than 10,000 of the proteins that have thus far been identified in the human genome. — The Shape and Structure of Proteins
So, how can molecules correctly work out each complex step without some crude form of awareness? — Gary Enfield
No awareness required, just a survival advantage. — Kenosha Kid
On the other hand, the emergence of living organisms also amounts to the emergence of subjectivity, or subject-hood. — Wayfarer
No, vegetable and microbial life could have gotten on just fine without us.
Same schema though:
1. What actually is it?
2. Can we explain what it supposedly does without it? — Kenosha Kid
Nobody can explain anything without it, nor would there be anything in need of explanation. — Wayfarer
It would help you to see where your ingrained methodological naturalism morphs into a worldview. After all, this is a philosophy forum. — Wayfarer
But, yes, *my* worldview is very much ingrained with my methodological naturalism, largely because it seems to explain a lot of the world. — Kenosha Kid
philosophy requires questioning of those things we take for granted as being obviously true. — Wayfarer
None of that has any bearing on the OP, as I agree that there's no need to invoke awareness as a factor in molecular biology. It's a broader comment on the role of naturalism in philosophy of mind. — Wayfarer
That you did not suggest an answer is not indicative of my close-mindedness. — Kenosha Kid
wonder if those molecules with some sort of consciousness have philosophical discussions on to what part of them, and how their consciousness connects to their physical existence. — god must be atheist
I wonder if those molecules with some sort of consciousness have philosophical discussions on to what part of them, and how their consciousness connects to their physical existence. — god must be atheist
I wonder if those molecules with some sort of consciousness have philosophical discussions on to what part of them, and how their consciousness connects to their physical existence.
If only someone could document the discourse between conscious molecules, then the argument would be over.
1. Things that have consciousness know that they have consciousness.
2. As conscious beings, they probably ponder the origin of their physical as well as their spiritual existences.
3. Because they ponder their existence's origins, they have consciousness.
Q.E.D. They have consciousness. — god must be atheist
Well, the Wikipedia article on homologous recombination describes enzymes as being recruited. So I guess this implies that each particular enzyme makes a free will choice as to whether or not to go into service. — Metaphysician Undercover
What about sheep? Is bleating a philosophical discussion? — SolarWind
Well, the Wikipedia article on homologous recombination describes enzymes as being recruited. So I guess this implies that each particular enzyme makes a free will choice as to whether or not to go into service. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we can identify the principles involved it may help us to explain consciousness. If that is via chemical means then fine, but as we're not even close to doing that, isn't it fair to consider other possibilities? — Gary Enfield
If we can identify the principles involved it may help us to explain consciousness. If that is via chemical means then fine, but as we're not even close to doing that, isn't it fair to consider other possibilities? — Gary Enfield
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